preview

Essay On Persepolis

Decent Essays

There are many different types of government systems in the world. In all of them there is someone who holds the power. Marxist criticism analyzes the group in power of the government and relates it to how the citizens lived in that period of time. It analyzes the government’s political ideals, and how they affect the characters’ lives inside the story. Marxist critics focus “on the ideological content of a work—its explicit and implicit assumptions and values about…culture, race, class, and power” (Meyer 1453). The Marxist criticism analyzes the aspects of society that affect the story and whether the author supports or rejects those aspects (Meyer 1453). Applying a Marxist criticism to the graphic novel Persepolis provides a better understanding of the underlying meanings by showing that the struggles of the characters in the novel were not only an individual struggle, but also a class struggle (Meyer). …show more content…

The Shah was overthrown by the revolutionaries and a new government was established. The power changed from the Shah’s government to the leaders of the Islamic Revolution. The people that held the power were uneducated and unprepared. As shown in Persepolis, a window washer became the director of a hospital after the Islamic Revolution (see picture 3). The former political prisoners were now seen as heroes. As featured in Persepolis, Satrapi’s uncle, Anoosh, was freed from jail and he was considered a Revolutionary hero (see picture 4). After a few years, the government started fearing everyone with knowledge and education, because they were afraid of another Revolution. The people that were seen as heroes were now seen as a threat. The people that received higher education started leaving the country and seeking a better life in Europe. The Islamic Revolution was an era of political change that led from the emigration of educated people to other countries

Get Access